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Ha-Joon Chang University of Cambridge E-mail: hjc1001@econm.ac.uk

Hamlet without the Prince of Denmark: How development has disappeared from today’s ‘development’ discourse. Ha-Joon Chang University of Cambridge E-mail: hjc1001@econ.cam.ac.uk. Definitions of Development. Income More than income (e.g., HDI)

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Ha-Joon Chang University of Cambridge E-mail: hjc1001@econm.ac.uk

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  1. Hamlet without the Prince of Denmark: How development has disappeared from today’s ‘development’ discourse Ha-Joon Chang University of Cambridge E-mail: hjc1001@econ.cam.ac.uk

  2. Definitions of Development • Income • More than income (e.g., HDI) • Development used to be about the transformation of the productive structure and the capabilities that support it, and the resulting transformation of social structure (e.g., oil-rich countries, Germany after WWII) • Now, development is about poverty reduction, provision of basic needs, individual betterment, and the sustenance of the existing production structure

  3. Development without Development:the MDGs • Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger. • Goal 2: Achieve universal primary education. • Goal 3: Promote gender equality and empower women. • Goal 4: Reduce child mortality. • Goal 5: Improve maternal health. • Goal 6: Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases • Goal 7: Ensure environmental sustainability. • Goal 8: Develop a global partnership for development.

  4. Development without Development:the MDGs (continued) • Targets under Goal 8 • development of an ‘open, rule-based, predictable, non-discriminatory trading system’ • reduction or even writing-off of developing country foreign debt • increase in foreign aid from rich countries, including trade-related technical assistance • provision of access to affordable essential drugs for developing countries • the spread of new technologies, mainly information and communications technologies

  5. Development without Development:the MDGs (continued) • The pro-developmental trading regime basically means an increased access to rich country markets by developing countries. • However, doing more of the same thing is not how today’s developed countries have become developed (e.g., Britain, the US, Finland, Japan, Korea) – Kicking Away the Ladder and Bad Samaritans • This is not to say that ‘traditional’ activities like agriculture and textile do not have a future (e.g., the Netherlands in agriculture, Germany in textile) • But this was possible only because they applied advanced technologies and organisational skills to these activities (cf. the Philippines)

  6. Kicking away the ladder- picture

  7. Anti-developmental ‘development agenda’: the DDA • Basically agriculture-industry swap (reduction in developed country agricultural protection and subsidies + reduction in developing country industrial tariffs through the NAMA [non-agricultural market access] negotiations) • But it is not going to help the developing countries to ‘develop’ even in the MDG sense • Many developing countries are net agricultural importers (often subsidised products from rich countries) • Main beneficiaries are the rich agricultural exporters and a few developing countries that export ‘temperate’ products (e.g., Brazil, Argentina)

  8. Anti-developmental ‘development agenda’: the DDA (continued) • In the long run, the DDA is going to hinder development by making infant industry protection very difficult • Consumer benefit minor (1.5% of GDP, one-off) • Proposed industrial tariff cuts down to the lowest level since colonialism and unequal treaties (5-7%) • Other policy tools (quotas, subsidies, regulation on FDI, etc.) banned or highly circumscribed • NOT a cut in average, but a Swiss formula (line-by-line: the higher the tariff rate, the steeper the cut)

  9. Ersatz Development: the MDGs and Microfinance • Some recognition of the need to increase productive capabilities. • However, it is to happen mainly through individual betterment. • MDGs: 6 of 8 are about improving income, health, and education of individuals (not about improving social institutions other than the problematic ‘global standard institutions’ discourse) • Microfinance: helping people lift themselves out of poverty through their own entrepreneurial efforts

  10. Ersatz Development: the MDGs and Microfinance (continued) • Only so many productivities that can be developed through individual improvement • Productive capabilities mainly occur in productive enterprises • Much of the knowledge created in productive enterprises is acquired in a ‘collective’ manner and deposited in the forms of organisational routines and institutional memories

  11. Ersatz Development: the MDGs and Microfinance (continued) • Today’s mainstream view amounts to ‘ersatz’ developmentalism, which believes that more educated and healthier individuals with secure property rights will somehow create a prosperous economy. • However, development requires a lot of collective and systemic efforts at acquiring and accumulating better productive knowledge through the construction of better organisations, the cross-fertilisation of ideas within them, and the channeling of individual entrepreneurial energy into collective entrepreneurship.

  12. Towards a new developmentalism • Go back to the ‘productionist’ tradition and put the transformation in productive capabilities that go beyond individuals back at the heart of developmental thinking. • But additional dimensions needed • Non-material dimensions • Politics • Institutions • Technological development • Environmental sustainability

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